Healing Foods: Prevent and Treat Common Illnesses with Fruits, Vegetables, Herbs, and More
By Dale Pinnock
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Healing Foods - Dale Pinnock
OUR ATTITUDES to food aren’t what they used to be. That’s certainly true. Not so long ago, here in the UK, the ‘meat and two veg’ approach was the norm in most households. Many of us would see our food as simply fuel, to keep us going through the day. Something just to fill us up and give us energy. The more we ate, the stronger we became, or so we thought, and many of us would leave the house, ready to take on the day, having eaten a full breakfast.
Today, we have finally started to make the connection between food and our health. No more do we see food as just a bit of bulky fuel. Modern science has proved unequivocally that the food we eat has a direct impact upon our health and wellbeing. By making the right dietary choices, we can essentially trigger, or prevent, disease.
With such realizations in mind, modern science has started to delve deeper into the world of what we eat. Foods are being analyzed down to their most basic of components, and are revealing all manner of secrets. The actions of different nutrients on body systems are being studied in the context of disease management, and the links between nutrient deficiency and increased disease states are getting stronger as each month goes by.
The public is also more informed than ever before, and healthy food is big
in the media. Every day new articles abound that tell us what foods are good for us and why, and what to avoid and why. There are new snippets of information about what is thought to be the next superfood, or the next food that has been linked with cancer, or the next food to make you look twenty years younger. While some of this information may be faddy and not always accurate, it has certainly created a buzz around food. It has made eating healthily something that’s actually quite cool and sociable. It has made us think in a different way about what we put in our mouths, and opened up a whole wonderful world of new possibilities, not only in what we can create in the kitchen, but also in the levels to which we can take our health.
We now have an incredible wealth of information at our fingertips. My aim in this book is to convey some of this knowledge, in a new and exciting way, to inspire you and to show you how easy and enjoyable eating for health can be.
HIPPOCRATES, the father of modern medicine, famously once said, Let food be thy medicine, and thy medicine be thy food.
Every recorded healing system on the planet, through every conceivable historical age, has recognized the vitally important role that food has to play in both maintaining good health and, indeed, turning around disease patterns. Many ancient cultures relied purely upon food remedies as their source of medicine, and many, such as Ayurveda and Traditional Chinese Medicine, studied the intricate relationships between food and physiological functions for millennia. Often, they used terms that relate to supposed energetic
patterns and activities in foods, and how these would interplay with similar energetic patterns and events in the body, to either cause balance or harm.
In the last two centuries, the study surrounding the relationship between food, our body, and our health has been moving at quite a pace. Quite early on, we discovered things such as proteins and carbohydrates, realizing their importance in energy production and tissue maintenance. Piece by piece, we became aware of the individual vitamins and the physiological roles that they played. We became all too aware of the negative consequences of being deficient in these vital compounds, but there was seldom research that focused on the potential of these compounds to actively heal the body. As nutritional science progressed, we focused on things such as the calorie, saturated and unsaturated fats, and body mass index (BMI). Nutritional science now has reached a bit of a sticking point. The dieticians may well tell you that we know all there is to know, and that eating x amount of calories will keep you at a healthy weight, and that at a certain weight and height you need y amount of a specific vitamin or nutrient.
Hippocrates Medicating a Patient
The truth is that food’s impact upon our health is enormous. It goes far beyond simply counting calories and eating our greens. Nutrition alone serves more than a maintenance role. Nutrients, vitamins, and minerals are all cofactors. This means that they directly influence the activity of very specific and vital physiological events, metabolic pathways, and biochemical reactions within our bodies. To this end, a few smart individuals began to realize that the manipulation of nutrient intake can have a huge impact upon both the severity and the progression of disease. This is because it can directly manipulate the internal biochemical terrain. It comes down to the key philosophy that underpins all natural medicine and natural healthcare. That is, the body has its own inherent ability to heal itself when given the right environment. We, as practitioners of natural healthcare, merely facilitate that correct environment.
Let’s use the example of a cut on your finger. After a few minutes, the bleeding stops. Within a few hours, a scab has formed, and the body is well under way at repairing the damaged tissue. Now, if we were to continually pick at the scab, it would cause the wound to bleed and prevent healing from taking place. Well, eating a diet that consists of processed junk food, full of toxic additives, and devoid of nutrients, is the equivalent of picking at that scab. But, if we are consuming a diet of fresh, wholesome, unadulterated ingredients, we are, in fact, creating an environment that is conducive to healing.
To illustrate the above, let’s look at dietary fats. Whatever you may believe, fats are a vital part of the human diet. However, we need the right ones. The fats that we consume can have a massive impact upon both the initiation of disease and the body’s own ability to manage it. When we metabolize (chemically process, following digestion and absorption) certain fats, our body produces a series of biochemical messengers called prostaglandins. These complex molecules, among other things, are actually involved in either the instigation and enhancement of pain and inflammation, or the prevention and reduction of pain and inflammation, depending on which type is produced. The type of prostaglandins that are produced can be greatly influenced by the type of dietary fats we consume. If we eat predominantly fats that fall into the omega 3, polyunsaturated fat category, then we will direct our bodies to make a far higher percentage of the type of prostaglandins that help to reduce inflammation and minimize pain. However, if we tend to eat more saturated animal fats, then we direct our bodies to manufacture more of the prostaglandins that instigate and enhance pain and inflammation. It is obvious to see that increasing inflammation can worsen and even trigger certain conditions and complications, whereas if we are able to reduce inflammation, it is just as obvious that we can greatly benefit many conditions.
This is a miniscule glance at the influence that dietary changes can have on our internal environment in a way that can help to manage disease. For this reason, I personally feel that there is no separation between food and medicine at all. If applied in the right way under the right guidance, the results can be equally as powerful.
All of the above refers to the study of nutrition, and what we know about the way in which nutrients actually interact with our bodies and the healing potential that nutrition can hold. However, the staggering results that we observe when people drastically change their diet, focusing on minimally processed plant foods, far exceed the physical changes that we would expect to see from merely increasing our nutritional profile. There are other elements present in these foods that act as incredibly powerful medicines. These hidden magic bullets are revealed in the next chapter...
Phyto = plant.
AS MANY OF US are aware, food has the ability to drastically harm or profoundly heal. Simple changes in diet can have almost miraculous powers in the healing of many disorders. Skin conditions, inflammatory diseases, digestive ailments, low immunity, all respond rapidly from dietary interventions.
A huge amount of research and scientific investigation has focused upon nutrition as a healing modality. The role of every conceivable nutrient has now been studied in the context of prevention and disease management. We are aware of the way in which every nutrient interacts with metabolic functions and biochemical pathways, in a way that can influence specific biochemical outcomes. We know the clinical implications of low levels of certain nutrients, and we have theorized many ways in which to address this in the clinical setting. However, it seems that focusing on purely the nutritional element of food always seems to fall short. The use of nutritional supplements never delivers the same level of healing and transformation as occurs when a complete dietary overhaul is undertaken (although, in my clinics I often use a combination of both dietary change and supplementation). The reason for this is simple. Nutrition is just one part of an incredibly broad, complex, and wondrous picture. Why is this? Because fresh food contains a whole cocktail of substances that reach so far beyond the scope of nutrition alone. These substances are the phytochemicals.
The realizations that I came to at different stages of my career led me to unlock the secrets that food hold. The initial stages of this began in the late 1990s. I began experimenting with my health as a teenager. I tried every supplement, exercise programme, and diet you could imagine. The only thing that ever really caused a huge shift in my health was a diet focused around fresh plant foods. Whenever I went back to a diet that was more like the typical Western diet, but accompanied by a whole cocktail of nutritional supplements, I would start feeling awful, and the benefits I had once experienced began to decline. From the nutritional perspective, I was taking in a level of nutrients that should, according to all of the supplement gurus, leave me feeling super human. But no! Something was missing, and I knew it was more than nutrition alone. During my nutrition studies, I thought I might find the answer, but sadly didn’t. We spoke about weird arbitrary terms like BMI, and measuring calories and fat. It wasn’t until I began my degree in Herbal Medicine at London’s University of Westminster that the penny finally dropped, and I suddenly made sense of what fresh food was delivering that supplements did not.
One of the main areas of focus in the study of Herbal Medicine is plant biochemistry and how this interacts with human physiological systems in order to bring about changes conducive to healing and correct functioning again. It was basically applied phytochemistry. Pharmacologists and pharmacognosists (people who study the medicinal chemistry of plants) unlocked the biochemical secrets that made the healing plants of ancient texts clearly valid in the modern scientific world. Suddenly it dawned on me. I knew that there were many very dull and dry texts out there that showed a full biochemical breakdown of individual foods. The search began. After a while, it became completely obvious that many of the actual pharmacologically active chemicals that are found in medicinal plants, that actually make them medicinal, are also present in notable concentrations in culinary plants. That had to be the answer. When we consume a diet that centres mostly on fresh plant foods, we are wading through nature’s potent medicine cabinet. We are consuming a vast quantity of chemical compounds that deliver some incredible healing actions. These compounds aren’t nutrients at all, because they are not vital for normal functioning. What they are is nature’s potent medicinal bonus. They are pharmacologically active medicines!
So why are they there?
Phytochemicals play a myriad of different functions in plants. Some may be vivid striking colour pigments, like the deep purple betacyanin found in beetroot. Others may serve a hormone-like function in the plant or regulate different stages of the plant’s growth. Others may become part of the plant’s structure or act as a readily available food source for the plant.
What can they do for us?
The actions of phytochemicals in the body are as varied as the number of phytochemicals found in nature. They can help manage inflammation, activate enzyme systems, influence hormone systems, to name but a few activities. Below are some examples of well known phytochemicals and the activities that they deliver.
Allicin – is a powerful and pungent sulphurous chemical found in garlic, one of the things responsible for its powerful pong. Allicin is known to be a powerful antibacterial and antiviral agent. It is also known to be a circulatory stimulant and powerful antioxidant.
Anthocyanins – are deep purple/red colour pigments, such as those found in blueberries, grapes, and red onions. These pigments are powerful anti-inflammatories and are known to protect the inner lining of arteries, helping protect them from rupture that will lead to heart attack or stroke. They are also known to relax blood vessel walls a little, thus lowering blood pressure.
Beta Glucans – are very complex, heavyweight sugar compounds that are found in structural elements of seeds and fungi. These potent compounds are one of the most powerful influential forces upon human immunity. They can drastically